Centre for Economic Policy Research
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Conclusion Our overall conclusion is that conflicts of interest at rating agencies, while not to be dismissed, have so far been more latent than overt. Market discipline, working through the need for agencies to retain their reputational capital, has been instrumental in maintaining this situation. Nevertheless, there are troublesome aspects of the way in which the industry has developed, and the potential exists for conflicts to assume greater significance in the future. To guard against this, we believe it is important to ensure that market disciplines are provided with full scope to work in their intended way. This means an emphasis on transparency, and possibly supervisory oversight of new activities being developed by the agencies; a reduction in the scope of regulatory recognitions granted to approved ratings; and a diminution of barriers to entry of qualified new entrants to the industry. 54 Conflicts of Interest in the Financial Services Industry 5 Conflicts of Interest in Universal Banking 5.1 Introduction Unlike the conflicts of interest in investment banking and accounting firms that played a central role in the recent financial scandals, the conflicts that arise from universal banking have had a long history in the United States. 43 Until a few years ago, these conflicts of interest seemed to have vanished, as the remedy of separa- tion by creating distinct classes of financial institutions, each with its own niche of intermediation, seemed to eliminate them. As the barriers between commercial banking, investment banking and insurance have disappeared, however, concerns about conflicts may arise again. We focus on the United States because conflicts of interest have been discussed in greater depth in the context of US firms and have attracted greater public attention. Although commercial banks, investment banks and insurance companies arose in nineteenth-century America as distinct intermediaries, by the turn of the twen- tieth century there were obvious economies of scope that could be attained by their combination. At a time when information costs were extremely high, com- mercial banks thrived because of their ‘special’ ability to collect information and monitor borrowers, overcoming adverse selection and moral hazard problems. In the absence of standardized accounting methods and rating agencies, 44 commercial banks had a decided advantage because their customer relationships provided detailed and specific information not available elsewhere. Commercial bank loans are still regarded as ‘special’ today, assisting borrowers who have poor or no credit reputations. Even for established firms, the market construes the announcement that they have been approved for new bank loans as a positive signal. 45 There are fixed costs of investigating a borrowing firm. If the firm turns out to be a good credit risk, it may be able to raise money from the securities market later. For a bank that has a lending relationship with a firm, it should be less expensive to perform due-diligence analysis for underwriting a new issue because of the reusability of information. Economies of scope may also exist in building a reputation for financial institutions. If a universal bank can use the reputation acquired in one business to enter another, it will have an advantage over specialized banks. 46 There may also be economies of scope in serving the large customer bases that commercial banks, investment banks, brokerages and insurance companies create. The considerable overlap in the information they collect may reduce the cost of supplying these services jointly. Proprietary information obtained by information in securities issue and lending should improve the quality of their portfolios. Universal bank- ing also increases the point of contact a bank has with a firm, expanding the number of services and improving its information acquisition and monitoring. 55 Universal banks thus offer many possible economies of scope that lower the cost of providing financial services. Yet, given that activities within a firm serve multiple departments, there are many potential conflicts of interest. If the potential revenues from one department surge, there will be an incentive for employees in that department to distort information to the advantage of their clients and the profit of their department. For example, issuers served by the underwriting department will benefit from aggressive sales to customers of the bank, while these customers are hoping to get unbiased investment advice. A bank manager may push the affiliate’s products to the disadvantage of the customer, fail to offer dispassionate advice, and limit losses from a poor public offering by placing them in bank managed trust accounts. A bank with a loan to a firm whose credit or bankruptcy risk has increased has private knowledge that may encourage it to have the bank’s underwriting department sell bonds to the unsuspecting public, paying off the loan and earning a fee. On the other hand, a bank may make below market loans to investors to finance the purchase of securities underwritten by an affiliate. A bank may also try to influence or coerce a borrow- ing or investing customer to buy insurance products (Saunders and Walter, 1994). Given the multiple services provided by a universal bank, there are multiple opportunities for departments or individuals to benefit from the conflicts of inter- est. While other countries had long permitted some form of universal banking, the United States only recently re-opened the doors. Breaking down the barriers imposed by the Glass-Steagall Act, the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999 permits banks, securities firms, and insurance companies to affiliate within a new structure – the financial holding company (FHC). 47 Most of the research on conflicts of interest in universal banking has thus been focused on the pre-1933 era when commercial banking deeply penetrated the securities business. Download 1.95 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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